Thursday, June 25, 2009

The word soufflé is irresistible as it blows over your tongue and through your teeth. {It's a word in French that you can say without your French Immersion daughters laughing at your pronunciation.} It means breath, or to take one's breath away. Which is exactly what happens. As you hold your breath, the soufflé takes a breath and falls.

In the unfair world of food, a chocolate soufflé is allowed to take a breath, but a cheesy egg soufflé is not. This soufflé is filled with a cheese called comté (pronounced con-tay) from a terroir that spans the Jura and the Doubs departments in France. This region learned how to transform milk into a cheese that could be preserved and gained status as one of the first cheeses with the Appellation d’Origine Contrôlée (AOC) signature. Unfortunately, I couldn't find this distinguished cheese in my grocery store so I used a humble, but satisfying tangy Swiss cheese instead.

Roux…béchamel…Mornay…meringue are all techniques learned in previous classes that merge in this recipe to make a delicate, diva-like, spectacular dish. First, prepare the milk by bringing it to a boil. Don't turn your back on it for too long or the neglected mixture will punish you with spilled, scorched milk on your stove. While watching the milk, make a roux. Whisk in the hot, un-neglected milk and stir until the sauce becomes thick. Now the sauce is christened a béchamel. Season with salt, pepper and nutmeg. Simmer and whisk for awhile to encourage the flavors to develop and avoid burning and sticking. Remove it from the heat and add the cheese. Now it's named Mornay. Next whisk in the yolks and set aside.

The last step is to make a meringue. After the meringue is at its perfect, softly-whipped-but-holding peaks stage, sacrifice some of it (about a third) to lighten the Mornay mixture. Carefully fold in the remaining whites {remembering your Grandma looking over your shoulder as you folded the egg whites into waffle batter when you were just a head taller than the counter, pointing out all the whites that needed hiding}.

Even pouring the mixture into the soufflé dish requires a patient, careful hand. You must avoid dripping any batter on the sides so that the soufflé can climb the dish without touching a patch of burnt-on batter. Then you must tap the dish gently to remove air bubbles. After putting it in the oven, you must not open the oven door while it's baking. And you must not slam the oven door. {Whisper soufflé and blow it a kiss.}

You can find the recipe for Soufflé au Comté (Cheese Soufflé) in the book Le Cordon Bleu at Home. To see how the rest of the Whisk Wednesdays group fared with their recipe, click here (or check out the sidebar) and then click on each blogger!

Tasting NotesThis is a creamy, airy and comforting dish that gives you a faint whistle before deflating. Not difficult to make, but impressive if you're courageous, especially if you attempt to add bacon, lobster or asparagus. Taste and enjoy its fleeting beauty.

"The only thing that will make a soufflé fall is if it knows you are afraid of it."— James Beard

::Whisk Wednesdays::We're cooking our way through a cooking school curriculum using the Le Cordon Bleu at Home cookbook. The "classes" are based on the Le Cordon Bleu curriculum found online and used as a guideline. Not all the items in the curriculum are in the cookbook, but most are. Where the items are not in the book, we try to find a suitable substitution. Find out more here.

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Gotta try this very pretty and delicate presentation, but of course, the recipe itself... so I'm hitting the closest cheese shop, pretty soon! Mmmm... looks amazinly good, hopefully it is not too hard to get such fluffy results!

Hi, we think your blog is amazing! We are just starting our own, and were wondering if you would perhaps like to exchange blog links. We are constantly adding more content, and would love your support! Your blog is a true inspiration for ours.

I still love reading your posts! It's like getting the mini-lecture I should have read before I jumped into making the dish myself! Your souffle looks simply marvelous! Now this one, I may make exception for with the heat!

I'm always stymied to think they used to use "clove studded onions" in bechamel preparation (not to mention at times, veal).

When I make this I like a combination of Comte & Gruyere, with a hint of dried mustard. A much simpler, yet comparably tasty cheese "puff" dish is a gougère, made of choux pastry and cheese. These are great for parties (you can pipe out 100 of em in no time flat) but certainly lack that impressive look of your souffle!

Hi!I believe I've been to your blog before, but I don't recall commenting. I just remember liking your banner a lot and noticing you live in Ottawa. I did my MSc there, nice town!I adore your blog, I love the butter and money calculations at the bottom (wow, it adds up quick!) I also really enjoy the concept of your blog and how you've worked your way through culinary school at home!Your photos are immaculate!!I'll continue to visit you!!!This souffle looks delicious, even if you couldn't find comte!